people-centered | community-supported

“I didn’t know if I’d ever be able to live in a city”

Angie Opsahl stands in the street, just off the curb, in front of her home on the 4400 block of West Medford Avenue in Grasslyn Manor, sweeping up the final remnants of fall. Grey hair and a soft-yet-stern features define the aging visage.

Indeed, the 64-year-old Opsahl has seen quite a bit but there isn’t anywhere else she’d rather be. “There’s no way I’d ever be able to move out. I absolutely love this city, I love this neighborhood – people are great,” she says.

Opsahl grew up in Waukesha County near Sussex where her great-grandparents immigrated to from Germany and Ireland about 165 years ago. “It was a farming community; I grew up on a farm. It’s not that way any more.

“When I lived in Sussex, I had a dead body in my yard and I haven’t had any of that, here,” says Opsahl, attributing the incident to a “drug deal gone bad.”

Now, after 22 years in the neighborhood, Opsahl is an unapologetic urbanite. She’s worked for the Girl Scouts, the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Milwaukee and the YMCA and says she loved working with teenagers in the central city.

“They were smart, they were innovative, they had a lot of challenges within their neighborhoods. [I] forced them to get their education and go on to college; I ran the scholarship program.”

And what she learned, over that time, is that it isn’t fair to talk about challenges in a purely race-based way. “Everybody has issues and problems and it’s not a black-white issue – it’s income, it’s income-based.”

Opsahl is, still, immensely proud of the success she’s been a part of. “Willie Hines, who was, he was one of my scholarship kids, I used to wake him up when he was in college at 5 in the morning, say, ‘Willie, you better give me your paperwork,’” she says. “There’s two that went on the culinary school and are chefs in the city of Milwaukee. One moved to New York and got a really great job out there.”

Most important, though, Opsahl says, is that, most of the time, these kids don’t simply “escape” – they stay invested in where they grew up. “The thing is, they’re not gonna leave their neighborhood. They’re going to fight to maintain and keep their neighborhoods intact.”

Is it important to invest in where you’re from? Opsahl says, unequivocally, yes. “Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. If you don’t have that, you don’t have anything.”

Did you find value in Angie’s story? If so, please subscribe to our newsletter; we publish the story of a different Milwaukeean every week.

Milwaukee Stories is a nonprofit organization that works to bring you the real stories of regular people all across our city. This work is solely supported by individual contributions from people like you. Please consider becoming a sustaining member, or make a one-time donation, today.

Support People-Centered Storytelling

Milwaukee Stories is a nonprofit organization that brings you the real stories of regular people. This work is supported by small, individual monthly contributions from people just like you; we need your help.